Movies to watch on Blu-Ray and DVD: Murder on the Orient Express, I Am Heath Ledger, and more

Out on March 5 and March 12

Kenneth Branagh directs and stars in a Poirot reboot. A gruelling (in a good way) debut from Ben Young.

Yes, here’s the new DVD and Blu-Ray releases coming out in the next two weeks. Click on for our reviews of Murder on the Orient Express, Hounds of Love, I Am Heath Ledger, Ivan’s Childhood, LA Vengeance, The Mysteries of Picasso, New World, and Phenomena.

I Am Heath Ledger

Released on the 10th anniversary of Heath Ledger’s death, this affectionate doc offers fans a welcome chance to revisit the life and career of an extraordinary talent gone far too soon. But it feels inescapably like a snapshot. Kicking off with his childhood and early work, and offering a brisk précis of his biggest movie hits and other creative endeavours, the film fuses Ledger’s own handheld camera footage with talking heads mainly comprising the Australian actor’s family and close friends.

Ledger's selfie tapes are the most intimate and revealing aspect here, but they’re all from the earlier part of his career, so as the film progresses, the publicity-shy star himself becomes more remote (the deleted scenes include one nice additional snippet).

The interviews, meanwhile, provide a warm sense of what it was like to be caught in his gravitational pull, and there are some lovely heartfelt anecdotes, admittedly buried within a few too many adulatory accounts.

Hounds of Love

Few do bleak and brutal like the Aussies, and Ben Young’s writing and directing debut is a gruelling watch. Loosely based on real-life serial-killer couple David and Catherine Birnie, who carried out a spree of horrific murders in suburban Perth in the ’80s, Hounds’ attackers are John and Evelyn, played brilliantly by Stephen Curry and Emma Booth.

It’s not, however, gratuitous, eschewing cheap scares and gore for an unblinking study of male violence – towards teenage abductee Vicki (Ashleigh Cummings) and within a toxic marriage. The inclusion of two of Young’s short films showcases an enfant terrible in the making.

Ivan’s Childhood

With this debut feature, Andrei Tarkovsky leapt straight into prominence, picking up a Golden Lion at Venice. In WW2 Ukraine, 12-year-old Ivan (Nikolai Burlyayev), orphaned when his family are killed by the Nazis, dodges back and forth across the front line spying for the Soviets.

Dark and jagged scenes of war are spliced with Ivan’s idyllic sunlit memories from before the conflict. More straightforward than Tarkovsky’s later philosophical brain-twisters, it has all his feel for lyrical texture and sense of angst.

LA Vengeance

Don’t be shocked, but this straight-to-DVD Bruce Willis caper isn’t quite the return to form you’ve been looking for. At least the Die Hard star looks a little more animated than in many of his recent duds. As private eye Steve Ford, he embraces the ridiculousness of this sunny, multi-stranded noir from Mark and Robb Cullen, the brothers who wrote Kevin Smith’s Cop Out.

The Mysteries of Picasso

Determined to capture artist Pablo Picasso’s process for posterity, Henri-Georges Clouzot’s simple but stunning filmuses transparent canvases to record the Spaniard’s roving pen as he creates 20 original works from scratch.

New World

I Saw the Devil scribe Park Hoon-jung’s sinuous, slow-burn drama pivots around a power struggle for Korea’s biggest crime syndicate. Choi Min-sik’s weary police chief seeks to weaken its grip, using twitchy inside man (Lee Jung-jae) to influence the vote for a new chairman. But after eight years undercover, can he still be trusted?

Hwang Jung-min steals the show as a charismatic potential heir, while a brutal elevator knife fight is the standout set-piece. The transfer is as sharp as the tailoring, but a trailer’s the only bonus.

Phenomena

One of Dario Argento’s most divisive horrors, and one of his last that could feasibly be labelled essential viewing, this giallo is absolutely bonkers. A pre-Labyrinth Jennifer Connelly is a sleepwalking boarding school girl who can communicate with insects, Donald Pleasence a crippled entomologist; together they investigate a series of grisly murders in the Swiss Alps.

The results are extraordinary, in all senses. Extras include giallo-expert chat-track and a feature-length doc.